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Thanks Once Again

I didn’t think I’d be here writing a second thank you post so soon after the last one. In fact I didn’t really expect to be doing this all again. For someone who isn’t a natural politician, I thought in 2015 that once in a lifetime was enough.

But we did it all again and I have to say I enjoyed most of it as much as I did last time.

I will admit though that the come-down from this campaign has been much harder given that I failed to build on the vote achieved last time. In fact it was reduced, mainly by virtue of people believing they were voting for Jeremy Corbyn.

I do have to say, as I said numerous times during the campaign, Labour had no hopes of winning in this constituency. The Labour candidate is also no supporter of Corbyn. In fact I support him more than he does!

So those previously loyal Green voters who switched this time to Labour really did nothing to help towards a Labour victory in Westminster and have arguably done some damage to the Greens.

The number of votes cast in a general election does count for each party. Not just in electoral terms but also in terms of how much government money is given to that party to continue to be part of the democratic process, something known as ‘short money’. We also have the deposits in each constituency, which at £500 a time is money that a party like the Greens, who don’t have large corporate backers, can ill afford to lose.

Over the whole country the Green vote fell by roughly 50% and that was certainly the case in Banbury. As a result there may well be a lot less chances to vote Green next time we have an election, especially if that’s any time soon. Much of the funds generated in this election will go towards leaflets, deposits and other expenses. The reduction in ‘short money’ will be something of a blow too.

So your vote and your support for the Greens really matters, whether we win or not. Labour won’t face the loss of their deposits and, with hundreds of MP in Parliament and now hundreds of thousands of members, they won’t be short of funds either.

Please remember that next time you think about abandoning the party you say you otherwise support. We’re only here because of that support, and when it’s removed we quickly lose the ability to give you the choice to vote Green in the future.

Every one of those 1250 people who took the trouble to support a party they truly believe in and give me their precious vote yesterday has my personal thanks.

I am of course disappointed that there weren’t more, especially as there were over twice that number just two years ago when our policies were just are relevant as they are now.

The dash to Labour was perhaps understandable in the context of Jeremy Corbyn’s popular appeal, but in a constituency like Banbury and vote for any of the progressive parties would have sent a message of hope and defiance just as effectively as one for Labour.

Sadly, in solidly safe seats like Banbury it’s very unlikely that one party will ever loosen the stranglehold being applied by The Conservatives, so we have to work together as the Greens have done in other constituencies.

Whilst I congratulate Sean for achieving an impressive increase on his vote share, he was still some 12000 votes away from a win. All the time Labour and the Conservatives continue to reject the electoral reform proposed by Greens and the Libdems we’re very unlikely to see individual votes changing the outcome of elections like these.

I’m very pleased on a national level to see The Conservatives on ever more shaky ground and I hope all the other opposition parties in Westminster will work together to thwart what will probably be a severe and extreme right coalition between the Tories and the DUP. I think we see now that this election was less about the good of the country and more about Theresa May clinging on to power at any cost.

As always, it was truly depressing to see the Conservative vote increase in number in a constituency that should be acutely aware of the damage they are likely to wreak on public services, the NHS and in particular the Horton Hospital which is now very likely to be completely downgraded or closed if the Conservatives maintain power.

Thanks to everyone who worked on my campaign and to the other candidates for a clean and well fought fight. I hope going forward, progressive parties in Banbury may work more closely together to achieve real social change and electoral reform, that way we can ensure every voice and every vote counts in the future.

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BBC Radio Oxford Banbury Election Debate

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For those who missed this on Wednesday you can now listen again to me and all the other candidates debating the issues and answering questions from listeners.

Particularly lively on the future of the Horton Hospital and the future of small businesses after Brexit and Victoria Prentis explains why she supports the overturning of the current ban on fox hunting and would like to see more hunting and shooting in the constituency.

The debate starts 2 hours into the programme linked below

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Planned Tory Education Cuts in North Oxfordshire Make For Terrifying Reading

EDUDespite claims to the contrary, the Conservatives will devastate our education system if they’re given another 5 years to do so.

Their dogmatic pursuit of so called savings (otherwise known as cuts) have already put the future of many children in jeopardy.

As with so many of their policies there’s very little left to cut now and faced with the choice of either reducing teaching staff or removing subjects, teachers and head teachers have had to resort to begging letters to parents just to keep some classes viable.

It’s an atrocious situation which, as usual, the Conservatives are in total denial of.  Claiming, as they always do, that they have put ‘record’ levels of funding into education (as they also claim for health and so many other important services).  But the devil is in the detail, with funding per pupil actually falling as class sizes increase.

Regardless of claims to the contrary in their cobbled-together, un-costed manifesto, there are more cuts to come.  But you don’t have to take my word for it, just look at the information available on the schools cuts website

These bare facts come from the people who know what’s happening to our schools.  The teachers at the sharp end of the Conservative agenda.  While these backward looking politicians wax lyrical about the good old grammar school days, our schools are being run into the ground and sold off to private companies to asset strip for a quick buck or two.

This needs to stop now.  Education is too important to be undersold, under-funded, undermined and treated as an optional extra in one of the richest economies in the world.

Read what The Green Party would do about education in government and then read below what you can expect from another 5 years of Tory rule.  The choice seems pretty stark to me.

KEY STATS FOR Banbury 2020

£5,526,507  in total cuts
Average budget cut to schools  = £115,13
Average budget cut per pupil = £346
Total number of teachers lost = 154

98% OF SCHOOLS IN Banbury WILL HAVE CUTS

Banbury Academy   -£234,985

Bishop Carpenter Church of England Aided Primary School   -£24,837

Bishop Loveday Church of England Primary School     -£119,733

Blessed George Napier Catholic School and Sports College -£261,047

Bloxham Church of England Primary School      -£147,027

Brookside Primary School -£73,999

Bure Park Primary School -£132,153

Chesterton Church of England Voluntary Aided Primary School        -£40,971

Christopher Rawlins Church of England Voluntary Aided Primary School    -£67,460

Cropredy Church of England Primary School     -£60,654

Dashwood Banbury Academy       -£166,382

Deddington Church of England Primary School             -£73,626

Dr Radcliffe’s Church of England School            -£73,142

Finmere Church of England Primary School       -£21,030

Five Acres Primary School             -£100,258

Fringford Church of England Primary School     -£35,925

Fritwell Church of England Primary School         -£54,028

Glory Farm Primary School            -£94,195

Hanwell Fields Community School           -£433,772

Hardwick Primary School   -£72,049

Harriers Banbury Academy            -£90,134

Hill View Primary School    -£90,094

Hook Norton Church of England Primary School           -£79,293

Hornton Primary School     -£42,305

King’s Meadow Primary School     -£97,312

Langford Village Community School        -£118,724

Launton Church of England Primary School       -£62,507

Longfields Primary and Nursery School -£80,488

North Oxfordshire Academy           -£418,763

Orchard Fields Community School           -£124,646

Queensway School -£58,434

Shenington Church of England Primary School             -£34,053

Sibford Gower Endowed Primary School            -£17,582

Southwold County Primary School           -£126,712

Space Studio Banbury        -£76,148

St Edburg’s Church of England (VA) School      -£13,984

St John’s Catholic Primary School, Banbury      -£50,648

St Joseph’s Catholic Primary School, Banbury -£47,279

St Leonard’s Church of England Primary School           -£107,479

St Mary’s Catholic Primary School, Bicester       -£57,696

St Mary’s Church of England (VC) Primary School, Banbury -£56,436

The Bicester School            -£317,716

The Cooper School -£471,621

The Grange Community Primary School             -£109,691

The Warriner School           -£385,461

William Morris Primary School      -£83,950

Wroxton Church of England Primary School      -£20,078